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Belle Heth. Photo Courtesy of Anne Heth Connor.
When referring to their Elementary School, many teachers, parents, and children in Radford speak the words ‘Belle Heth’ every day. Few realize, however, that Belle Heth was also an extraordinary person. So notable, in fact, that the school located at 151 George Street has born her name for nearly one-hundred and forty years. Belle Heth was a lifelong resident of what is now Radford, and it was she who gifted a town lot for the purpose of building a new school. The school became the Belle Heth Academy, but Belle’s role in Radford’s history goes far beyond those halls.
In 1842, Belle Heth was born Isabella Norwood Hammet to parents Edward and Clementina Craig Hammet. At the time, the Hammets were a prosperous, slaveholding family living at their 500-acre estate called Norwood. Belle’s father had emigrated from Ireland in 1825 and by the 1830’s had established himself as a prominent citizen. Edward was an influential man. He also started the Presbyterian church in Radford, now known as Old Brick Presbyterian Church. In the 1850’s, he championed the development of a rail line through the region, and it was fifteen acres of his own land that first became known as Central Depot. It was this critical piece of development that gave rise to the City of Radford. Continue reading →